By Sheila Hamanaka
East Asia Radio Collective
WBAI Womens Collective
Slanted Screen: Asian Men in Film and Television
Written and Directed by Jeff Adachi
RECOMMENDED: 4.5 fists (out of 5)
Anyone interested in their own consciousness and how it was formed
should see Slanted Screen, Jeff Adachi's look back at Hollywood's
attempt to emasculate what today amounts to two thirds of the world
population. Or at least half of it.
Slanted
Screen, winner of the Best Short Documentary award at the NY
International Independent Film & Video film festival, lives up to its
double entendre name by taking us on a 60 minute time traveling trip,
stopping to look at over 60 movies and tv shows that have shaped the
American image of the Asian male since the era of the silent film.
Many of these films are forgotten, and it's really important to see
them as a foundation for newer forms of stereotyping that young people
are still exposed to.
My
father is a retired Asian actor, and like many of the actors depicted
and interviewed in Slanted Screen he had the fortune and misfortune of
playing just about every Asian stereotype you can think of: houseboy,
karate chopper, Japanese tourist, Eskimo, Japanese naval officer, even
Chairman Mao! Several of the actors that writer/director/producer/(and
San Francisco public defender) Jeff Adachi interviews were household
names when we were growing up: Sessue Hayakawa, James Shigeta, Mako.
Adachi also interviews actors Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Dustin Nguyen,
Phillip Rhee, Will Yun Lee, Tzi Ma, Jason Scott Lee, comedian Bobby
Lee, producer Terence Chang, ascerbic writer Frank Chin, and directors
Gene Cajayon and Eric Byler.
In
the end, Ahachi's point is clear: it takes an entire industry from
writer to producer to actor to distributor to audience to create,
deconstruct, and recreate the Asian male. This is an inspiring
message: we all have to pitch in. Our kids will thank us. The Slanted
Screen interviews an educator who points out the harmful effect of
negative stereotyping on children. This is something I can attest to.
Like many people of color, I grew up suffering from the effects of
"internalized racial oppression." I wanted white features, and heroes to
me were white males.
The
cultural institutions of entertainment are themselves created and
buffered by other institutions: education, labor, law, segregation in
housing, the armed services, and on and on. It all adds up to "The
System". If Adachi's film falls short, it is in not tying all the
historical pieces together with history itself, except in the most
general sense.
For
example: whereas Adachi and his interviewees show us how Asians were
disempowered by emasculating the male image, what's the dynamic with
African Americans. Who have been distorted by the opposite
stereotype: the hyper-sexualized male image.
Actually, in order to understand "disempowerment" in all its
chameleon-like forms, one has to first understand "power." According
to movement historian David Billings of The People's Institutute, an
anti-racist training organization, an interesting change took place in
the social services in the 1970. There was a shift from looking at
poverty, addictions, etc, as social ills as having social roots which
must be addressed socially, to individual pathologies which had to be
treated individually with counseling and drugs.
If Asians are disempowered by being de-sexualized, are African
American males empowered by being hypersexualized? Of course not.
Because sexual conquest has nothing to do with real power. Power is
the ability to wage war, to invade another country, to form a union
and win a decent wage, to cross a border when you want to, to provide
for your family, to have and exercise freedom. The ability to have sex
with white women, to kick a white actor's butt, to see a
stereotypically handsome male on screen of your own color is NOT power.
While we might see Sidney Poitier coming home for dinner, we will not
see the battalions of Black soldiers picking up arms against racist
whites in the South during World War II. While we might see Bruce Lee
flex his muscles we will not see the Viet Cong driving the US out of
Vietnam. While we might see Antonio Banderas carve a Z with his rapier,
we won't see Hugo Chavez slash a V for Venezuela into the chest of US
hegemony in South and Central America.
Who are these racist movies for? They are not for people of color,
primarily. People of color have for the most part managed to have
their own social institutions and art forms, which were largely ignored
by the white public. These racist films are really designed to
"empower" white people, by putting people of color in other, more
"animalistic" groups that should be detested, pitited, gawked at, but
not feared, because they are ultimately inferior.
I am no expert, but
I'll wager that if you measured the testosterone level of white males
after watching racist movies in which the villain was a male of color,
it would be higher. In reality, the Black males hypersexualized by
racist white culture have historically been, and continue to be, set
upon and literally emasculated by white mobs who are protected by the
racist system.
Racism = racial prejudice + power
Power, then, is not simply a feeling. I am not empowered because I
feel powerful, or sexy.
Asians,
Africans, Latino/Mejicanos/Chicanos, Arabs, and Indigenous males are all
stereotyped with a slightly different twist. Each group has been
subjected to racist genocide either here or abroad. What Hollywood and
mainstream tv does is to lift everyone out of context and turn the
world into one steamy, lurid sexualized soap opera with the white
female the prize, the victim, the ideal image, the Helen for all wars
foreign and domestic.
Do
you think this is intentional? Is there a hidden motive? That is
another movie.
Had
Adachi dipped a little deeper into the cinematic pool he could have
come up with exceptions to the rule. Such as the unforgettable Toshiro
Mifune in many Kurosawa films, from The Seven Samurai to Yojimbo. Or
Tatsuya Nakadai, who played a complex character in a real political
setting in Masaki Kobayashi's must see but seldom seen trilogy, The
Human Condition, a movie that showed me how Japanese fascism worked in
its army.
In one scene the young Japanese protagonist, a
pacifist/socialist who is disgusted with the Japanese invasion of
Manchuria, talks to an old Chinese revolutionary who tells him that no
matter where he goes, he will always meet someone who is in the
struggle. This is a different kind of power than the fascist male
stereotypes fed to the Japanese public, and helped turn it into a
brutal killing machine.
We
will meet these people who embody true power in films coming out of
independent media, like Third World Newsreel or Paper Tiger TV. Or the
other people's cinemas around the world.
Catch this movie!
Sheila Hamanaka
East Asia Radio Collective
WBAI Womens Collective
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The website for Slanted Screen is: http://www.slantedscreen.com.
UPCOMING NY AREA SCREENINGS:
New York International Asian American Film Festival
The Slanted Screen plays at the New York
International Asian American Film Festival on Saturday, July 15, 2006, 3:30pm.
Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium, the Asian Society,
725 Park Avenue, New York City (at 70th Street)
For more information, visit www.asiancinevision.org
The Slanted Screen plays at the Long
Island International Film Festival on July 17, 2006, at 1:30pm at the
Bellmore Theater. For more information, visit www.longislandfilm.com.
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